1 / 10

Michael Hills, PhD

PSYC313-04B Cross-Cultural Studies The Emic-Etic Dilemma: Measurement problems in cross-cultural research. Michael Hills, PhD. THE EMIC-ETIC DILEMMA Introduction. Psych research difficult to conduct validly anyway C-C psych research even more difficult: language

lilah
Download Presentation

Michael Hills, PhD

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. PSYC313-04B Cross-Cultural StudiesThe Emic-Etic Dilemma:Measurement problems in cross-cultural research Michael Hills, PhD

  2. THE EMIC-ETIC DILEMMAIntroduction • Psych research difficult to conduct validly anyway • C-C psych research even more difficult: • language • social norms of communication etc. • inappropriateness of : • theories • concepts • methods • instruments

  3. THE EMIC-ETIC DILEMMAWhat to Measure? • A behaviour in one culture may reflect quite a different motive from the same behaviour in another. • Thus we have to find behaviours that are “functionally equivalent” • There are some universals in human behaviour. But behavioural manifestations of them vary. • However Research must decide whether to focus on the specific or the universal. • Specific = emic • Universal = etic. • (From phonetic and phonemic) • ie; study from inside (emic) or outside (etic) the system?

  4. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMAWhat to Measure (Continued)? • If only emic viewpoint accepted, then no research could occur • Berry therefore says • Start with emic in own culture • Move to imposed etic • Learn about other culture • Compare own emic and other emic • Decide whether comparison possible • Where possible look for universals, and so DERIVE an etic • (See Figure on next slide)

  5. Research Activity Culture A Culture B Research Activity 1. Begin research in own culture Emic A 2. Transport research to other culture Impose Etic Emic B 3. Discover other culture Emic A 4. Compare the two cultures Emic B 5-1. Comparison not possible Emic A Emic B Emic A Emic B Derived Etic 5-2. Comparison possible

  6. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMAHow To Measure? • Measures developed in one culture inappropriate for another. • A test is a sample of behaviour • If behaviour resulting from Independent Variable varies between cultures, then sample appropriate for one culture may be inappropriate for another. • Concept of test itself is culture-specific - as is the motivation to achieve at them.

  7. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMAHow to Measure (Continued) • Culture-free and culture-fair tests have not succeeded. • Culture-fair assumes that test is equally unfamiliar to all cultures - impossible. • Alternatively each culture develops its own form of a test (emic). Equivalence almost impossible to establish. • Thus test must be defined in terms of the behaviour in which we are interested • Motive and affect much more difficult to define equivalently.

  8. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMASampling • A sample is a representative segment of the population • However populations differ culturally • Therefore samples must also differ. • So how can they be compared? • Only by controlling for extraneous variables. • Thus only by comparing THREE cultures, holding only the variable in which we are interested constant

  9. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMASampling (Continued) • Volunteering biases samples • Differently in different cultures. • But truly random samples are almost impossible to obtain. • Therefore participants are commonly those more accessible who may not represent the population on the variable in which we are interested.

  10. EMIC-ETIC DILEMMATest Administration • Misinterpretations by researcher and by participant • Therefore “lie” tests necessary to check validity of responses. • Thus C-C research is difficult - but not impossible.

More Related